This article explores the evolving representation of intellectual dissidence in Romanian cinema after the fall of communism, focusing on three films: Fox: Hunter (1993), 12:08 East of Bucharest (2006), and The Case of Engineer Ursu (2023). Through a comparative analysis grounded in film theory, memory studies, and political history, the study argues that Romanian cinema has assumed a compensatory role in narrating the moral and historical dimensions of opposition to the communist regime. Drawing on frameworks from scholars such as Marc Ferro, Robert Rosenstone, and David Bordwell, the article examines how each film constructs distinct narrative universes that reflect changing public attitudes toward the recent past. The article traces a shift from the tragic solemnity of early post-revolutionary portrayals to the reflexive irony of the New Romanian Cinema and finally to the factual, justice-seeking tone of recent documentary. These aesthetic evolutions mirror Romania’s ongoing struggle with historical accountability, civic memory, and critical consciousness. By recovering the figure of the intellectual dissident, cinema emerges as both a site of ethical engagement and a space of public remembrance in a post-totalitarian society still negotiating its relationship with the past.
Raul Ștef (Sun,) studied this question.
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